earthly voyages

Phone Call

The first time I spoke with her was by phone, in mid-September. I remember the Red Sox had just lost a critical game to the Yankees. Pedro Martinez had thrown eight brilliant innings and the Sox had scored no runs. They lost one zip. I got to the office early Monday morning after my run and before I even closed the door, Katrina, the paralegal from hell, yelled out from the library, “Someone looking for a good lawyer, I told her to try another number, pick up on line two.” A little joke about my competency made over our technologically sophisticated intercom.

“Todd Benjamin,” I said into the phone.

“Mr. Benjamin, I’m looking for a lawyer.”

“Yes.”

“You’re a lawyer, right?”

It always starts this way, very sharp on the probing repartee.

“Yes I am ma’am, how can I help you?”

“Well where do I start? It’s such a long story and I’m not sure what to do.”

“Why don’t you just try to tell me what you want to tell me about how you hope a lawyer can help you.” I yawn, barely containing my impatience.

“Well, I had a little accident the other day and I saw your name in the Yellow Pages and want to know if you can help me.”

“Maybe I can, and maybe I can’t ma’am, but I have to know what it is you’re talking about. What kind of accident was it? Where did it happen? How did it happen?”

“Well, you see, I was waiting for the bus when this guy came up to the bus stop in a big truck and asked if I wanted a ride. And I sort of knew him, or had seen him around, so I got in. And then we drive somewhere I didn’t want to go. I know the city, and he is way the hell away from where I was going, and I tell him “stop and let me out.” But he didn’t. So I opened the door and he grabbed onto my belt and then he let go of my belt and sort of pushed me and I fell out of the truck and the rear tires ran over my ankle.”

“Tell me your name please.”

“Yvonne.”

“Yvonne what?”

“Smith.”

“And where do you live, Ms. Smith?”

“Well, you see, I’m calling from the hospital, and I had to have two operations, and I don’t think I’m going be able to keep my apartment, and I’m going to have to live up with my mother again, and I don’t want to.”

“And what is your mother’s address?”

“How much is this going to cost me, mister lawyer?”

“Nothing Ms. Smith. The way I work on accident cases like yours is that I don’t charge anything for my time and effort unless I’m successful in recovering money for my client. And if I do recover money for you, then I get one third of the money we recover and you get two thirds of the money, but if we get nothing then my time, advice, and effort cost you nothing. Now tell me, did the police investigate the accident?”

“Well, yes and no.”

“What do you mean by that?”

“Well they came to my hospital room to talk to me.”

“I see. And did the police also come to the scene of the accident?”

“Well, that I don’t know, you see I was hurt pretty bad and the ambulance came and took me to the City Hospital before they was any police there at all that I know of.”

“And who called the ambulance if you know?”

“Well I don’t, you see.”

“Alright, I understand Ms. Smith, Yvonne. A case like yours can get complicated fast, even though it’s only an auto accident. And I think, if I’m hearing you correctly, that you’d like to get some money to pay your medical bills and to compensate you for the pain and the injuries you’ve suffered in this accident. Am I right?”

“You got that right.”

“Right. And there are just so many things that can go wrong in a case of this kind that would make it hard for you to collect that money, just so many things, that you really must retain a lawyer. Whether its me or some one else, its important that you have legal counsel representing you, making sure that you get the money you deserve, that you don’t say anything that hurts your case, that the insurance company, if there is one, treats you fairly.”

“Oh, I understand that. I’ve been hurt before. I want the money. And I’ve decided already, you’re my lawyer, mister.”

“Thank you, Ms. Smith. Okay, to start working on your case I will need you to sign certain documents. One is a contingent fee agreement which confirms there will be no fee due me from you if I am unable to successfully recover money for you but that if I do help you recover money I will be paid the one third fee we discussed.”

“That’s fair.”

“And, of course, I also need a medical release, so that I can get your medical records from City Hospital, or from any other place where you may receive treatment.”

“That’s fair too. So when are you coming out to see me?”

“Well, what I’d actually like to do Ms. Smith, Yvonne, is to send my investigator, James Crawford, out to meet with you. Mr. Crawford will have the papers for you to sign, he can get some additional information from you, and he will then get us a copy of the police report.”

“That sounds good.”

“Good. Now promise me that except for me and Mr. Crawford you will not talk to anyone else about this case, that is about your accident, the circumstances giving rise to your accident, how you are feeling in regard to the injuries you suffered in the accident or anything related to you accident.”

“Well, of course I did talk to the police.”

“Yes. Well in the future tell anyone who wants to talk with you about the accident, even the police, that you are represented by counsel and can’t talk to them without talking to me first. What is it you said to the police?”

“Well, like I told you, I told them I was waiting for the bus and that I went for a ride with this guy, Jeff I think his name was, and that I wanted to get out of the truck, and he didn’t want to let me get out of the truck, and then he sort of pushed me out, and the rear wheels ran over my ankle and busted it badly.”

“Alright Yvonne, please understand something. If what the man who drove the truck did was an intentional act, that is, if he purposely pushed or shoved you out of this truck, then your chances of recovering against his, or the truck owner’s insurance policy, assuming there is such a policy, are one thing. But if you just fell out of the truck, and the accident was a result of the truck driver or truck owner’s negligence, their lack of due care under the circumstances, that’s what we mean by negligence, then you probably will be able to recover. You understand the difference? Because to my mind it is important for you not to say you got pushed out of the truck. Do you understand me?”

Oh I could go on. And I do. What a life this lawyering is.

Lawstory- 02 – Yvonne

I drive to Yvonne mother’s home through neighborhoods I haven’t been in for years, streets that haven’t changed a bit, one, two, and three family houses, some boarded up, shingled, every one, once a working class neighborhood, now just poor, yards with fences and dogs barking behind them, nobody on the street in daylight.

I stand on the porch and knock at the door of the first floor apartment. I hear someone coming down the hall on crutches. “She’s a looker,” Crawford had said to me, but I’m still unprepared for the stark beauty of Yvonne Smith. A junkie no doubt, probably a sometime whore, twenty-five or six perhaps. Angry. Or is it only guarded? Skinny. Sexy. Five foot seven maybe, with gorgeous dark skin, dark eyes, and tight straight hair pulled back in a bun. A loose black shirt is buttoned up to the middle of her sternum between her breasts. I see her taught nipples when she leans over on her crutches. I note the tingling in my lips. I remember the story a doctor friend told me of how he compulsively peeked down his female patients’ shirts and stared down their blouses even after he’d completed their physical exams.

Yvonne’s wearing impossibly tight jeans cut off below the knee on the right leg so she can get them on over her cast. Bare footed. Her toenails are painted red. The skin on her face glistens. She wears no makeup. Her lips are full. She sticks the tip of her tongue out between them when she’s thinking. Who is this person, I have the space to wonder. Where is she from? What is she really like?

“Come on in mister lawyerman, I thought you’d never come by to visit me.”

“Well, I couldn’t get you to come to my office. And you said you had to see me or you’d go to another lawyer. And the court hearing for the fellow who was driving the pickup that ran over you is this Thursday. And I know you’ve been talking to the people from the district attorney’s office. And you’re going to give testimony under oath. So here I am.”

“Come in then. Let’s go to the kitchen and sit down, please.”

I follow her down an empty hallway, past a closed bedroom door on the right. There are no posters or pictures on the hallway wall. The light from the kitchen guides me.

“Pardon the mess. This here’s my mother.”

“Ma’am. Pleased to meet you.”

“Same here.”

“Nice little apartment,” I say.

“Oh not really,” says Yvonne’s mother, “but kind of you to say. I can never get the maintenance people to do anything”

There are so few clients who connect with me on a real level and here are two women who I sense are talking with me as straight as if we were long time friends.

“You want some instant coffee Mr. Benjamin?”

“Please call me Todd. No thanks. I really haven’t got a lot of time, but I did bring a copy of the police report and I’d like to go over it with you.”

“Well that’s fine, but I want a coffee. Say momma would you pour me some hot water please into this cup?”

“Sure, Sugar.”

“Okay, go ahead mister lawyerman, your time is more valuable than mine’s.”

I let that slide.

“Well, here are the police reports,” I say, pulling the folded photocopies from the inner pocket of my suit jacket. “And here is the interesting part from the first one. You see here where it says ‘description of accident’ how it says … no better let me read it to you. ‘Officers on routine patrol in the B104 car receive radio call of woman down on Seaver at Forest. Twenty-six year old black female in obvious distress laying in roadway crying with manifest ankle injuries. Victim states she was thrown from truck and tires ran her over. Called 911. EMT’s arrived for transport to City Hospital.'”

“Yeah, well that’s what happened. It did.”

“I believe you, but what I want to focus on here is the phrase ‘victim states she was thrown from truck.’ But before we do that let me also read you what officer Collins said after his visit with you at the hospital.”

“Victim, Yvonne Smith, age 26, states she was waiting for bus when picked up by unknown stranger. States driver, black male, six one, 180 pounds, 30 years old, light skin, baseball hat, no recalled scars, stopped and offered ride. Says she wanted to go to Brookside and he headed toward downtown. Tried to get out and he wouldn’t let her. Pushed on door of moving vehicle. Fell out landing on right shoulder and run over by rear tires. Could ID.”

“Interesting, no?” I say. “Because in this report it says, ‘pushed on door of moving vehicle and fell out,’ which makes it hard to place the blame squarely on the driver.”

“Well, but that’s exactly what happened. I told you.”

“I understand that’s exactly what happened, and I don’t want you to lie, but remember what I told you, that if it wasn’t an accident you won’t recover any money. If you’re interested in pursuing a criminal complaint it’s one thing, and we would treat that differently, and you wouldn’t need me as your lawyer. But if what we’re trying to do is recover money then this has to have been an accident. Now couldn’t you have just leaned against the door and it sprang open and you fell out.”

“Well, that’s exactly what happened.”

“Or maybe you were partially out the door when he accelerated and took off and that caused you to fall.”

“Yeah, well it was like that also.”

“Good.” I say. And then I say some more.

Lawstory- 03 –

I’ve had my offices in the same building for twenty years. Don’t ask me why, it just happened that way. The building is squeezed in next to some big old department stores, not far from the red-light district, and surrounded by the downtown building boom. It’s amazing what happens when yuppie urban planners and real estate developers turn old cobblestone streets into a mall. I’m on the fourth floor in a corner office. Really sort of nice once you’re inside. Cool in color, awake to the street below, oriental rugs, a framed print of the Constitution given to me as a Christmas gift by my young partner in crime, an infrared photo of Cape Cod from space, a lithograph of the port of Boston in the eighteen hundreds, the picture of F.D.R. that adorned the vestibule to my parent’s apartment in Newark.

When I got out of law-school I was forty years old and not such a desirable commodity. I’d worked as a hospital administrator for years and there were simply no law jobs for forty year old freshmen lawyers with a background in hospital administration. So when I was finally offered a position paying less than half of what I made at the hospital I took it and worked for nine months with an in-house insurance defense outfit. I felt I really had no choice. And I learned a lot. That firm was a little like being in a MASH army field hospital. There were lots of cases needing attention, thousands of cases, with more coming in all the time. American Field Insurance Group represented mostly taxi companies. The insurance side of the company had actually been established fifty years ago when the immigrant founder of the taxi companies got tired of paying someone else for his mandatory auto insurance premiums. So he started his own insurance company. And then he bought garages and parking lots and real estate and before you knew it he was ninety years old, many times over a millionaire, and the proud possessor of the first nickel he had ever earned or stolen.

Lawstory- 04 –

It’s one of those days. I’m up at six A.M. and out in my car in the fifteen-degree morning and at exercise class by seven. The heat in the studio didn’t work. I could see my breath indoors. The instructor’s nipples were firmly pressing against her tee shirt for the entire hour. Not that I noticed. I was in the office with a bagel and juice by nine. The phone rang. And rang. And didn’t stop ringing until five in the afternoon when I forwarded my calls to the answering service. That kind of day, when the phone is never out of my ear and I never leave my chair except to visit the men’s room. People come in to visit without appointments. Old clients. New clients. I sense the business is booming. Not that I’m making money, thank you, just that business is booming. I put people off. I don’t take their calls. Prisoners call collect to talk about anything with someone outside. Stockbrokers. Relatives. Friends. Old clients. Claim adjusters. I tell Katrina to say I’m out of the office. “I hate lying,” she says, “I’m going to go to hell for this Todd. I want a raise.” I beg people to call me later in the week. “I don’t want to blow you off, Charlie, but I’m having one of those Mondays. You’ll call back mid week, okay? Promise? Take care.” I triaged my calls. I attended only to potential new clients. There are a dozen new client calls if there are any. Katrina brings in the mail she’s opened by ten a.m. I never finish reading it before leaving at nine that night. I see my son in his bed being read to by his loyal lovely mother just as his eyes closed. These are the bread and butter days. I don’t really mind them, except when they preclude my other pleasures and endeavors. Most of all I remember perking up when I hear it is Yvonne calling. I can smell her too, “Please, Mr. Lawyerman. I been busted. Please come get me out of here.”

Lawstory- 05 –

I find out Yvonne is held on one hundred thousand dollars bail. It might as well have been one hundred million. She might as well have been held without bail. I ultimately have the amount of bail imposed reviewed at every level of the system, magistrate, trial judge, appellate judge. One hundred K it is; murder not being treated lightly by the courts in any season.

I visit the county jail early on Tuesday, the new jail, the Holiday Inn of jails. Not like the old jail, the catacombs of jails. Call it what you will, they both smell of piss and ammonia.

First I sign in as a lawyer at the front desk. Then I lock all my belongings except a pen and some legal papers in a metal gym locker. Then I am passed through the trap. My hand is stamped, so even if I want to switch clothes with the convict and stay in his place he still can’t just switch from his orange county jail uniform to my gray striped lawyers uniform and walk out to freedom. Need that infrared stamp thank you.

Now locked inside with only my pen I await the elevator. There are video cameras and monitors mounted in the corners of every wall and hallway. There are video cameras in the elevator. On the sixth floor there are still more cameras and more ammonia. At the end of the gleaming institutional hallway is a guard station where I present myself. I am ushered into the attorney visiting room from one side of the hallway. She is ushered in from the other side, the prisoners’ dormitory side. The doors are locked. There is a bell to ring if we want to be let out.

She looks sallow. Tired. Frightened. Caged. “Thanks for coming to see me,” she says. “Its okay,” I reply, “its my job.” The government it turns out has absolutely no evidence against Yvonne other than her confession. Oh, and there’s a dead man. And he was her pimp. Yvonne’s confession is damning but open to diverse interpretation and analysis. She was arrested by Detective Wormly, the famous Black, street smart, bearded Wormly. The Wormly with the big gold cross hanging down his chest and no sympathy. The long suffering, cynical, tired, but incorruptible Wormly who tracked her down and didn’t even ask for a sexual favor.

“I just want to be out of here so badly. I want to see my daughter. I want to go home. I don’t sleep good here. I hate it.”

I feel her pain and imagine my own. I remember the frightened little boy sent to camp against his will crying in terror and helpless humiliation, ” I want to go home.”

I am staring into her eyes. She meets my gaze. We both hesitate to look away. I wonder how many levels of conversation and unexpressed thought we manage on automatic pilot at once. There is our focus on the likely trial, on strategy and hope. There is talk of her unfreedom with remembrances of pain present and pain past. The longing to be somewhere other than where you are. Slavery. I imagine her past. I imagine her physical and mentally pleasure and pain. I remember my past. I realize I am no longer looking in her eyes but staring at my hands. I wonder if she is thinking about her past. About me. The realization that we are caged behind a series of real metal doors and secure locks comes to me again. That I will at a time more or less within my control walk out the doors, out of the building, into the sweet free air, while she will remain behind, perhaps forever, trapped with the scent of ammonia. I am aware she is a woman, a sexual being. I wonder about her sexually. About her sexual past. In my mind I see her naked. I see her breasts, her nipples, her bush of pubic hair. I imagine her shaved. These thoughts follow one another; commingle with one another. Only seconds of silence pass. I worry about disease, about AIDS, and cancer. Wonder if she wonders about me.

Lawstory- 06 – The Suffolk County Courthouse

I enter the Suffolk County Courthouse. Court officers looking at women are lazily scanning the metal detector. This is definitely not federal court. The old courthouse is absolutely an amazing building and every time I walk into it I feel as sense of awe. I know it’s corny, but I do. The courtyard has the first fourteen amendments to the Constitution cemented into it as a walkway leading to the stairs leading to the entrance to the courthouse. Big bronze Roman numerals are embedded in the concrete. It is like the tablets with the Ten Commandments on them, Sometimes I walk around them out of respect for the law, not wanting to trample the high and revered principles they espouse. Other times I walk right across them. Intentionally. Sometimes I feel I am trampling on the law because it is so irrational and unjust. At other times I feel the message and intent of the law being seared into the soles of my feet. I am inhaling the law into my body. From the roots to the brains, traversing my body like blood.

Paul Digiaccomo is one of the nicer court officers. Can’t be more than five foot three inches tall. Waddles when he walks. Easily, or not so easily, weighs more than three hundred pounds. Once I watched as he dieted for months down to a very reasonable one eighty. It was amazing to see him shrinking before my eyes every day I came to court. He was on a liquid diet. I remember him being so proud of himself. And then in no time at all, literally no time, a month maybe, he was back up to three twenty. Don’t ask me how it happened. Too much pasta I think. But Paulie’s smile is still real. Every day it is real. He’s not one of these “good morning, counselor” guys. It’s “Hi, Todd, how ya doin’?” Every day. To everyone.

“Who’s in the First Session, Paulie?”

“Burns,” he says and he groans.

“She’s a piece of work now, isn’t she,” Digiacomo says, “a lesbian, which I don’t care about one way or the other, but man is she also not a very pleasant person, a down right ignorant person, if you ask me, can’t make her mind up half the time, I swear I don’t know how she gets dressed in the morning, and besides that she’s ugly, but hey, that’s just one man’s opinion.”

“Thanks for the encouraging words,” I say.

I sit in the jury box with the comfortable seats waiting for our case to be called. Time passes. Lots of time. I schmooze with other attorneys who come in and out of the session on status conferences. I read back copies of appellate court decisions. I marvel at the stupendous waste of time, at the arcane process for the processing of criminal defendants through the system. The wheels grind slowly and frankly only partially fine.

Yvonne comes up into the dock. I go to stand next to her. Our case is called. The prosecutor says the police responded to a shooting and found Vernald Jackson, aged twenty-two, sometimes pimp and full time punk dead in Yvonne’s apartment. There are three bullet holes in poor Vernald’s back. His sneakers are untied. The homicide detectives at the scene think the loss of life is no big deal. It is finding the preps, completing the puzzle, filling in the colors, that turns them on. Find the bad guy. Get more scum off the street. Just doing their job. All of this takes two minutes. We plead not guilty. It is a capital case. The defendant has a history of defaults. Bail reduction is denied. A pre trial conference date is set.

Then the next case is called.

7.

Yvonne tells me the following story. It is the story she told the police. Perhaps she didn’t remember my telling her not to talk to anyone.

The police found her at her girlfriend’s apartment. They took her downtown to the lockup on “suspicion of murder.” They read her the Miranda warnings. They offered her a lawyer. They told her things would go better for her if she told them the truth. They told her they knew she didn’t shoot Vernald. Then they turned on the tape recorder. They read her the Miranda warnings again. They told her she could have a lawyer, that they would stop asking her questions any time she wished to. They asked if she knew she was being recorded and if she was giving her permission for them to record her testimony voluntarily, and freely, and without threat or coercion or promise. And she nodded her head yes. And they said, “You have to answer audibly, Yvonne, because the tape recorder does not pick up your nods. Is you answer to my last question ‘yes’?” And she answered, “Yes.” The trap doors closed.

The police asked her to tell them if she knew what had happened to Vernald. And she told them. Gave them what they wanted, her tape recorded statement. Sealed her fate.

She had been at the apartment with Vernald and he was beating her. Not viciously enough to draw blood, or to send her to the hospital as he had, just smacking her around, slapping her in the face, punching her in the arms, squeezing her breasts painfully. He kicked her in the ass. He hit her across the mouth with his backhand.

She had been up all night taking tricks downtown. Gave a guy a blowjob in his car. Went down for a guy in another car. Let some funny looking dude from the suburbs unbutton her blouse, unhook her brassiere, rub her breasts, lay his head on her breasts. She jerked him off. He was afraid of disease he said. She had a beer or two. A snort of cocaine. Nothing much. Just trying to pass the time. She worked alone. Came home at about five. Caught a little sleep until Vernald woke up and wanted company and just started messing with her. Was in one of his unfathomable rages. Told her “get outta bed, bitch,” and when she didn’t pulled her out naked. She wrapped the sheet around her. Held it to her with her arms tucked inside. Vernald hit her. Hit her again. Stormed around the apartment. Threw an empty beer can at her. Called her “cunt.” Called her, “whore.” Said she was a no good black bitch. Said she was holding money back on him. Opened the window and took all her clothing that had been laying on the side of the bed and threw it into the street.

She was pissed. Angry. Pulled on a pair of Vernald’s jeans, his floppy old gray sweatshirt and her high heels and was out the door. “Fuck you, Vernald, you bastard,” she said.

When she’d gotten out onto the to street she’d run into her brother, Allen.

“What the fuck happened to you, Yvonne,” he’d asked her. She told him.

“I’m gonna get my gun and scare the shit out of that fucking bastard,” Allen said.

So Yvonne and Allen go down the street to where Allen’s gun is hidden. The rest is history.

8.

Her calls from jail pain me, baffle me. One day she was nice and appreciative and sweet. “I appreciate how you are trying to help me,” she’d say. And the next day her calls were cold and suspicious of me. I could feel it in her voice from the first hello. She didn’t trust me. Thought I was ripping her off. Couldn’t or wouldn’t understand why things were taking as long as they were taking. “I shouldn’t even be talking to you,” she’d say, “I should just report you to the Board of Bar Overseers.” And, of course, I would get angry and hurt, without critical distance. I should have been saying, “I understand why you feel that way. I’ve tried to explain it to you before, and I will try to explain it to you again if you’d like. The law is not fair. And it’s hard to hear that. I know how you feel. And you are not wrong to be feeling what you feel. But there is nothing we can do about it at this time. We have done everything we can. Now we just have to wait. There is nothing further that can be done at this instant. Not by anyone. Not F. Lee Bailey, or Johnny Cochran. We’re held here.” Not like I haven’t said this before. Instead I say, “Look, if you don’t trust me find another lawyer. I am doing everything I possibly can for you. You’re the one going behind my back; talking to people you shouldn’t be talking to, making matters more complicated. I have nothing more to say to you. Call if you can be nice or leave me alone.” Did we say fifty nine year old lawyer here or did we say nine-year-old boy?

9.

I’m talking to a seventy five year old woman with an intense Yiddish accent. “Oy, I vuz in such a terrible fall. At Temple I vuz. Und I cracked mine hip. A real fracture. Five days vus in the hospital. Und then they transferred me to a rehabilitation center, so called, and I got in mine mouth an infection und before I left vus missing mine partial. Twelve hundred dollars cost me the partial. Can you help me?”

10.

The Columbian woman with three kids in talking to me across my desk. Her three kids are nice enough, but very distracted, impatient and bored. The mother is here because her six year old has been modestly injured in an auto accident. My job includes helping her to find treatment for the boy’s ongoing discomfort and pain. Most medical providers I know of do not like to treat young children. I call up a physical therapist who practices near where the woman and her children live. I ask if he’ll treat a young child.

“How young?” he asks.

“Seven going on eight,” I answer.

“But she’s only six,” the woman whispers across the desk.

I put my hand over the mouthpiece. “Please,” I whisper.

“But I’m a Christian,” she says.

“Mommy, all Lawyers are liars,” her six year old eight year old says.

I look at him, playfully surprised. “How do you know that,” I ask him.

“I saw it on television.”

“And you believe everything you see on television?”

“Yeah,” he says

11.

Samuel has been working for me for three years now. I’d met him when he was an aide at Metropolitan State Hospital in Waltham, Massachusetts in the fall of 1980. There were about a dozen aides who worked on the wards as trustees. All were men serving life without parole sentences for first-degree murder. All were let out of prison for six hours each weekday on an unpaid work release programs.

Samuel had been born Black and poor in Virginia, one of seven children. It really is no excuse. After high school he’d joined the U.S. Coast Guard, which seemed like a good idea at the time, but he was a bit of a misfit, smarter than the others, and not just a little lost. It was while in the Coast Guard that he began hanging out in Boston: women, a little smoke, nothing to do, and nowhere to go. Adrift. He and his best friend, Digger, decided to stick up the bar at the Holiday Inn on Massachusetts Ave. outside Central Square in Cambridge one November after midnight. It was ill conceived and more impulsive than well reasoned. They waited until the bar was empty. They nursed their beers. The bar tender served them a last round. Digger pulled out a pistol. Sam claims he didn’t know Digger was even carrying. The bar tender drew a gun. They each fired and the bartender was dead. He had a wife and two young children. Sam was shot in the exchange of fire and ran bleeding from the bar. They’d taken all of two hundred dollars. The FBI knew who he was immediately by his fingerprints on the beer bottles. He became a fugitive and was successfully a fugitive for years. Traveled in fear but without incident. When they finally caught him the Middlesex County prosecutors offered to give him a second-degree murder sentence if he were to plead guilty and give them the name of his accomplice and best friend. Fifteen years to life seemed as long as life then. The disloyalty was too unbearable. He took the case to trial and lost, as he knew he must. There simply was no alternative. And in the end he found himself in state’s prison for the remainder of his natural life without the possibility of parole.

12.

Met State, right? 1980. You can’t really imagine what it was like and how its face changed with the passage of years and seasons. I took that job simultaneously with beginning law school nights, right after falling out of the tree and dislocating my right elbow, right after meeting Lynne, right after Steven’s father died. But here I go again, back to World War II, back to the Bronx and Brooklyn, back to the old countries, back to the cave. Never should have been in that tree.

Metropolitan State Hospital was huge, immense, occupied hundreds of acres of incredibly beautiful pastures and woodlands in the suburbs just outside of Boston. There was a history to the place and old photographs and archives to document it. It was one half do-good social services for the chronically mentally ill and one half Bedlam. Whoever build the hospital had been inspired by an era of plenty and hope and kindness. Of a largess that seems by today’s lights boundless. The physicians were the royalty of this medieval estate. Their flocks and charges were the abandoned mentally ill. The staff was the peasantry who minded the flock. Sometimes it was benign, even healing. Sometimes it was blackjacks and straightjackets. Some times it was all lobotomies, or electroshock, brains in formaldehyde in jars, and a potter’s field for the unnamed dead.

13.

You’re always paranoid as a trial lawyer, at least you should be. Indeed, if you’re not paranoid as a trial lawyer you’re not doing something right. The entire legal system is based on adversarial and conflictual relationships, the myth being that by throwing two people with opposing views into an arena that the truth will emerge victorious. I don’t think it works that way, but I also really don’t know a better way to resolve conflicts. And neither do you. So if you’re not paranoid, if you’re not worried someone is trying to best you as a lawyer, you dramatically increase your odds of being hurt. I didn’t quite understand this when I started practicing law, but it is intensely and essentially true. And I learned the lesson quickly.

One of the amazing things about these adversarial relationships in the law is that they do not really have to be antagonistic. Oh, they may well be and often are, but it is not integral to the practice. Think of boxers trying to beat one another, to hurt one another, to score the most points, or knock the other man senseless. Yet when the fight is over the two fighters shake hands with one another, honored that their adversary had given all that he had to the battle, win or lose, so too football or soccer games. Give it your all and shake hands at the end of the game. Someday you may be back in the arena with that very same now on your team. What goes around comes around.

“So don’t yell at me,” I tell the lawyer on the other end of the phone line. “And don’t be snooty either. If you think that’s efficacious in front of a jury feel free to do so, but you and I are just talking to one another and there is no way you can bully or threaten me. Just cite the law and the facts correctly and give me your perspective or spin as to the merits of your position without the dramatics. We’re talking probabilities here. Of course I understand the weakness in my case. I’d be a complete idiot if I didn’t see the weaknesses of my position. The absolutely best offense in the law is a defense. I get it. But don’t try to bully me into submission, because, unless you’re an absolute rookie, you know that no case is a guaranteed winner or a guaranteed loser and the best we can usually do for our clients is reach some understanding regarding the realistic odds and a more of less fair outcome. So do me a favor, imagine I know the weaknesses of my case, and know them well, and help us along by acknowledging that you understand the strengths of my case and the weakness of yours.” Hey, that’s my rap.

It is the coin of my realm and separates the wheat from the chaff. Any lawyer who says he has never lost a case, or can guarantee the outcome of a case, just hasn’t put in the time. Or has a connection that is very dirty. And I hate dirt. That’s why I try so hard to be honest. I know that sounds like a bit of an oxymoron coming from a lawyer, but it’s not. I know the other lawyer will bend the truth to gain a victory, will stretch the rules, and will take advantage of loopholes and of my ignorance. I do the same. We call that a clean fight, a fight that follows established rules of conduct. It is when the fight isn’t clean that the greatest danger arises for the advocate.

All this talk about relationships between lawyers does not necessarily apply to the lawyer’s clients who may lie and cheat all the time in the name of self-protection and disclosure and the lawyer may never know. Indeed, if you don’t want to know, don’t ask. With the police the rules of the game become even stranger. Police are professional witnesses, like paid expert witnesses. They have a position and a goal and will go to extremes to achieve it. It is jokingly called “testilying” and it goes on all the time, because the police do not like to lose, because they are self righteous and because they know right from wrong and have a sharp sense of what “justice” is, and it may not be what happens in a courtroom.

14.

The jury is out for about two hours. It is a good sign. How could they conceivably convict someone of first degree murder in such a short time. The evidence is not complex. She gave the statement. Where is the evidence of her shared intent. I take hope.

The court officers bring Yvonne back into the courtroom. They take off her handcuffs and she sits on my right side closest to the jury box. Judge McDermott comes out onto the bench. The court officer announces that the jury is entering the courtroom.

“Will the jurors and the defendant please remain standing,” he says. It is the custom.

“Have the jurors reached a verdict?” asks the clerk, and they nod affirmatively.

“Will the court officer please hand me the verdict slip.”

The court officer walks up to the foreperson and takes the verdict slip from her. She hands the paper to the clerk. The clerk hands it to the judge. The judge takes out his reading glasses and reads the verdict to himself and makes sure it is signed and filled in properly. He hands it back to the clerk. The clerk hands it back to the foreperson. It is such an elaborate dance routine.

“Ladies and gentleman of the jury,” reads the clerk, “on indictment number seven one six nine four three zero charging the defendant Yvonne Smith with murder in the first degree what says the jury, guilty or not guilty, madam forelady?”

“Guilty,” says the foreperson.

“Guilty of what,” asks the clerk.

“Guilty of murder in the first degree,” says the forelady.

Yvonne’s scream is never forgotten.

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